Friday, May 5, 2006

How To Racquetball Grommet

JE @ LANGUAGE

Verse:

1. Significado:

Given the definition of the verb do Amado Alonso and Pedro Henríquez Ureña, "the verbs are special forms of language to the reality as we think the person's behavior." Therefore, given that reality is changing the meaning of the verb must be served under morphosyntactic criteria, or according to their mode of action. A verse is a set of words as subject, rhythm and cadence, or rhythm only, as opposed to prose, which is not usually subjected to these procedures. Often the usual formal channel of expression of lyric or epic poetry.

2. Elements of classic verse:

Metro: meters means the number of syllables and accents, also called feet, which compose a verse. The see you fall into a minor art simple lines and simple art to see you more.
simple verses minor art can be said to consist of more than eight syllables

Rima: Rhythm is the key of a certain verse. Usually always have an accent called " strophic" this on the penultimate syllable and the accent appears verses composed on the penultimate syllable of each " hemistich."

Rate: rate achieved by the placement of stressed and unstressed syllables and recurring rhyme, these fixed sequences are called stanzas. The discipline that studies the kinds of lines and stanzas is called a metric.

4. Kinds of lines: Art and Art Major Minor:

There are two types of verses according to the number of syllables

4.1 .- Simple Verses minor art can be said to consist

For more eight syllables. They may include:

two disyllabic syllables

trisyllabic three syllables

tetrasyllabic four syllables

pentasyllable five syllables

hexasyllabic six syllables

Heptasílabos seven syllables

octosyllabic eight syllables

4.2.-largest art verses are those containing from nine to eleven syllables. They are divided into two classes.

· Simple Verses major art:


Eneasílabos nine syllables


ten-syllable pentameter decasílabo eleven syllables

dodecasyllabic twelve syllables

Tridecasílabos thirteen syllables

Alexandrian fourteen syllables

5. Verse and stanza

Verso

♣) is a special form of expression.

♣) is more difficult than prose and verse texts that have particular characteristics that create a specific rhythm and musicality in the way of counting things.

That was in May by May

when it's hot,

when the wheat ripens

and the fields are in bloom,

when the lark sings

and answers nightingale,

when

love will serve to love

Stanza.


is a set of verses related to the measure and rhyme. In the example there are three stanzas of 4 verses each.

References:

http://roble.pntic.mec.es/msanto1/lengua/proverso.htm

6. Rhyme:

consontante In the rhyme, all sounds vowels and consonants, rhyming "home" and "based." When describing the rhyme, using a system of letters to symbolize all the sounds that rhyme


7. Assonance rhyme:

rhyme in assonance the repetition of sounds is only in vowels

Light
burned in a glass on the floor, the wall
cast the shadow of the bed
,
and from that shadow could be seen at intervals


drawn rigid body shape.

References:

www.avantel.net/ ~ eoropesa / poetry / theory / idrima.html # assonance

http://www.trinity.edu/mstroud/spanish/rima.html


8. Poetic license: The sinalefa, The hiatus, the umlauts and the syneresis.

The sinalefa:

The sinalefa is the resource that is used in the metric verse to cause deletion or loss of a vowel or vocal group at the beginning or end of a word when the beginning or end is in contact with the end or beginning vowel respectively of another word, in order to reduce the number of syllables in the verse. For example, in the hendecasyllable of Garcilaso de la Vega :
The gold hairs escurecían
that and are the single syllable count sinalefa, the same as-and-ro, so that overall pentameter form the correct number of syllables, eleven
.

References:
www.eswikipedia.org / wiki / sinalefa

The Hiatus:

When vowels emisiónde not form a single voice, we have a hiatus. This will consist of (1) a weak voice and a strong vowel pronounced:

aí-pa-ís

au-ba-ul

ei-re-t

eu-re -ú-ne ed

-fi-lo-so-fi-a

io-ri-o

ie-ri-e

References:

http://www.prwebtech.com/soltero/hiato.htm

The umlaut:

In linguistic, or cream the umlaut is a diacritic that consists of two points (¨) located on the vowel (in the case of point i is replaced by the sign).

ä ë ï ö ü ÿ

Examples:

shame

stork

linguistic

penguins

old drainage, etc.

The umlaut or cream (¨) is a sign that is placed over the vowels in the following cases:
a) To indicate that the vowel has to decide or in combinations GUE and gui. In this case, the use of the umlaut is prescriptive. Examples: shame, penguin, argue.
b) In poetic texts, the umlaut can be used placed on the first vowel of a diphthong possible, to indicate that there is. Thus the word that affects and the verse that comes equipped with a syllable.

Examples:
Deste whisper The sweet sound. L
trees move in the wind.

citations and references: http://roble.pntic.mec.es/msanto1/ortografia/dierejer.htm

http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Di% C3% A9resis

http://culturitalia.uibk.ac.at/hispanoteca/Grammatik-Stichworte/Gram% C3% A1tica% 20espa% C3% B1ola/Ortograf% C3% ADa-asterisk-di% C3% A9resis-slash-dash- raya.htm

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